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The Efficacy of Upfront Intracranial Radiation with TKI Compared to TKI
Alone in the NSCLC Patients Harboring EGFR Mutation and Brain Metastases
Chunyu Wang1, Xiaotong Lu1, Zongmei Zhou1, Jingbo Wang1, Zhouguang Hui1 2, Jun
Liang1, QinFu Feng1, Dongfu Chen1, Zefen Xiao1, Jima Lv1, Xiaozhen Wang1, Xin
Wang1, Tao Zhang1, Lei Deng1, Wenqing Wang1, Jianping Xiao1, Junling Li3
, Nan Bi1, Luhua Wang1
1 Department of Radiation Oncology, National Cancer Center/Cancer Hospital,
Chinese Academy of Medical Sciences and Peking Union Medical College, Beijing,
People’s Republic of China, 1000212Department of VIP Medical Services, National Cancer Center/ Cancer Hospital,
Chinese Academy of Medical Sciences and Peking Union Medical College, Beijing,
China, 1000213Department of Medicine Oncology, National Cancer Center/Cancer Hospital,
Chinese Academy of Medical Sciences and Peking Union Medical College, Beijing,
People’s Republic of China, 100021
Corresponding authors:
Luhua Wang, No.17 Panjiayuannanli, Chaoyang District, Beijing, People’s Republic
of China, 100021. E-mail: [email protected], Tel: +8610 87788799.
Nan Bi, No.17 Panjiayuannanli, Chaoyang District, Beijing, People’s Republic of
China, 100021. E-mail: [email protected], Tel: +8610 87788995.
Abstract
Introduction: The high intracranial efficacy of EGFR-TKI challenges the role of
upfront intracranial radiation therapy (RT) in non-small cell lung cancer (NSCLC)
patients with EGFR mutation and brain metastases (BM). Therefore, we conducted a
retrospective analysis to demonstrate the role of upfront RT in these patients.
Materials and Methods: Patients that had histologically confirmed NSCLC with
EGFR mutation, brain metastases, and received TKI or upfront RT with TKI were
included in this study. Intracranial progression was estimated using the Fine-Gray
competing risks model. Kaplan-Meier analysis and Log-rank test were used to
evaluate and compare intracranial progression-free survival (iPFS), systemic PFS
(sPFS), time to second-line systematic therapy (SST) and overall survival (OS).
Results: Among the 93 patients included, 53 patients received upfront RT and TKI,
and 40 patients received TKI only. Upfront RT group showed lower intracranial
progression risk with adjusted SHR 0.38 (95% CI, 0.19 to 0.75, P= 0.006) and longer
median time to sPFS (15.6 vs 8.9 months, P= 0.009). There were 9 out of 36 (25%)
and 16 out of 34 (47.1%) patients who had oligo-progression received salvage RT in
the RT group and TKI group, respectively. After the salvage RT, upfront RT did not
prolong the median time to SST (23.6 vs 18.9 months, P=0.862) and OS (median
time, 35.4 vs 35.8 months, P=0.695) compared to TKI alone.
Conclusion: Compared to upfront intracranial RT, the salvage RT to oligo-
progressive disease allowed patients getting TKI to have similar time on initial TKI
and OS despite worse iPFS. The best timing of intracranial RT remains to be further
verified.
Keywords: non-small cell lung cancer, EGFR mutation, brain metastases, radiation,
tyrosine kinase inhibitors
Introduction
Lung cancer has the highest mortality among all cancers around the world[1, 2]. The
non-small cell lung cancer (NSCLC) comprises more than 80% of lung cancers, and
almost 50% of NSCLC are lung adenocarcinoma[3]. About 30% of stage IV NSCLC
patients present with brain metastases (BM) at the time of diagnosis[4]. The median
overall survival (OS) varies from 3.0-14.8 months according to their graded
prognostic assessment (GPA) scores[5]. Whole-brain radiotherapy (WBRT),
stereotactic radiosurgery (SRS), or surgical resection, used alone or in combination, is
the first line treatment for BM. While therapy to the brain relieves the intracranial
symptom and improves the intracranial local control, it may cause neurocognitive
toxicity that presents later in the course[6, 7].
The discovery of EGFR mutation introduced new treatment hope for NSCLC. The
invention of EGFR-tyrosine kinase inhibitors (TKI) drastically altered the clinical
evaluation and treatment options for NSCLC patients. Patients with EGFR mutation
have a 50-70% risk for developing BM[8]. A few phase II clinical studies reported
that single-agent EGFR-TKI showed promising results in TKI treated-naive patients.
The intracranial response rate (iRR) was 75%-88%; median intracranial progression-
free survival (iPFS) was 6.6-14.5 months, and median OS was 15.9-21.8 months [9-
11]. Subsequently, the question is whether there is enough evidence to defer radiation
therapy (RT) until the intracranial progression on TKI. Regrettably, no published
phase III clinical trial answered this question. Therefore, we conducted a retrospective
analysis to compare the upfront RT role in the treatment of NSCLC harboring EGFR
mutation and BM.
Materials and Methods
Patients
The institutional review board at our institution approved the present study. We
retrospectively reviewed NSCLC patients treated at our institution from January of
2010 to December of 2016. All patients included in this study met the following
criteria: 1) histologically confirmed NSCLC; 2) EGFR-TKI sensitive mutation
confirmed by polymerase chain reaction amplification (PCR); 3) MRI confirmed
brain metastases; 4) treated with TKI or upfront RT concurrently with/followed by
TKI; 5) complete pretreatment baseline data. The exclusion criteria included: 1) prior
EGFR-TKI treatment before brain metastases; 2) no follow-up data achievable; 3)
Synchronous or metachronous malignancies (except for cutaneous (non-melanomas)
carcinoma, thyroid papillary carcinoma, phase I seminoma or cervical carcinoma in
situ that were curatively treated).
The following variables were reviewed for analyses: date of birth, gender, smoking
history, the Karnofsky Performance Score (KPS) when BM was diagnosed, histology
of NSCLC, EGFR mutation type, stage, BM diagnose date, number of brain
metastases, maximum size of BM, presence of BM symptom, extracranial metastases
status, and the name of EGFR-TKI. The disease-specific Graded Prognostic
Assessment (ds-GPA) was calculated according to the published study[5]. The
intracranial lesions were evaluated every three months by magnetic resonance
imaging (MRI), and the primary lesion and other metastasis sites were monitored by
computed tomography (CT) or positron emission tomography–CT if needed every
three months. The intracranial objective response rate (iORR) was evaluated using
The Response Evaluation Criteria in Solid Tumors (RECIST, version 1.1) [12]. The
first progression site and date were recorded with intracranial (primary BM, new
lesion or both), extracranial or concurrent failure. The treatment regimens after any
progression were documented. Of note, the dates patients started to receive a second-
line systematic therapy (SST) were recorded. The most recent follow-up time was
recorded.
Statistical Analysis
The patients’ characteristics and iORR in the upfront RT group and TKI alone group
were compared with the χ2 test or Fisher's exact for categorical variables, and one-way
analysis of variance for continuous data. The iPFS was calculated from the date of
BM diagnoses to the progression of the primary metastases sites or a new intracranial
lesion or both. The sPFS was derived from the date of BM diagnoses to the progress
of any site, whether intracranial or extracranial. The time to SST was calculated from
the date of BM diagnoses to the initiation of a second-line systematic therapy to the
whole body. The OS was derived from the date of brain metastases until the date of
death or censored on the last follow up. Kaplan-Meier analysis was used to estimate
iPFS, systemic PFS (sPFS), time to SST and OS. The log-rank test was used to
compare the data. Considering the competing risk of death to iPFS, we used
univariable and multivariable Fine-Grey competing risk regression to compare the
cumulative incidence rate of intracranial recurrence rate[13]. Univariable and
multivariable Cox proportional hazards analysis examined factors associated with
increased risk of death. Significance for inclusion in the multivariate model was set at
p < 0.10 and p < 0.05 as a significant predictor of outcomes. Statistical analyses were
performed using STATA 14 (Stata, College Station, TX).
Results
Patients’ selection and characteristics
Between January 1st, 2010 and December 31st, 2016, 1499 NSCLC patients developed
BM and 806 of them underwent an EGFR mutation test, among which 306 patients
were identified with EGFR-mutated NSCLC with BM. Forty patients were excluded
because they did not receive TKI therapy, and 57 patients were excluded due to
development of BM after TKI treatment. Seventy-two patients were excluded because
TKI was not the first line of treatment after the diagnosis of BM. Nine patients were
excluded with a non-sensitizing EGFR mutation; 11 patients were excluded due to the
concurrent metastases with leptomeningeal metastases; five patients were excluded
due to simultaneous diagnosis with other cancers; 19 patients failed to follow-up in
our institution. The remaining 93 patients were treated with RT and TKI (RT group,
n=53) or TKI alone (TKI group, n=40). In the RT group, there are 30, 14 and 9
patients received WBRT, SRS, and WBRT with simultaneously integrated boost
treatment, respectively. Table 1 shows the baseline characteristics of the patients
according to treatment groups. Most patients were never-smokers (63%). Patients who
received RT were more likely to have BM>10 mm (75% vs 57%, P=0.066) and had
more symptomatic brain metastases (38% vs 20%, P=0.065). In the RT group, 32% of
patients were stage I-III at diagnoses, with a lower percentage of patients in the TKI
group (18%). There was no difference between the two groups concerning age,
gender, KPS, smoking history, number of BM, extracranial metastases, ds-GPA,
EGFR mutation and type of TKI.
Treatment outcome
The intracranial lesion response rates were evaluated every three months. The results
showed that 3 (5.7%) patients had a complete response (CR), 47 (88.7%) patients
showed a partial response (PR), and 3 (5.7%) patients had stable disease (SD) in
upfront RT group. The corresponding numbers in the TKI alone group were 5
(12.5%), 28 (70%) and 6 (15%), respectively. One (2.5%) patient experienced disease
progression in the TKI group. The upfront RT group showed a trend to have higher
iORR compared to TKI alone (94.3% vs 82.5%, P=0.093).
The median follow-up time for all patients was 37.7 months (range, 3.4-63.2). 23
(43.4%) patients in the RT group and 25 (62.5%) patients in the TKI group developed
intracranial failure. The median iPFS for the entire cohort was 22.6 months (95%
confidence interval [CI], 13.6 - 31.6 months). The median iPFS for the RT group and
the TKI group were 27.6 months (95% CI 20.2 - 35.0 months) and 16.1 months (95%
CI 14.6 -17.6 months), respectively (log-rank P=0.053). After controlling for stage
and number of metastases with the Fine-Gray competing risks regression model,
upfront RT group showed a significantly lower probability of intracranial progression,
with adjusted subdistribution hazard ratios (SHR) of 0.38 (95% CI, 0.19 to 0.75; P =
0.006, Fig 1, Table S1).
Until the last follow up, 70 out of 93 (75.3%) patients experienced systematic
progression. The RT group had longer sPFS (median time, 15.6 months, 95% CI 4.9-
26.4 months) than did the TKI group (median time, 8.9 months, 95% CI 7.2-10.6
months) (P= 0.009, Fig 2). As shown in Table 2, 36 and 34 patients developed
failure in the RT and the TKI group, respectively. The numbers of the first site for
intracranial, extracranial and simultaneous failure in RT group are 10 (18%), 22(42%)
and 4 (8%). And the corresponding numbers in the TKI group were 14(35%),
14(35%) and 6(15%). Patients treated with RT were less likely to experience
intracranial failure as the first failure, compared with patients treated with TKI
(P=0.091).
The median OS from BM diagnosis was 35.6 months (95% CI, 31.2-40.0 months) for
the whole cohort. As shown in Figure 3A, OS did not differ significantly between the
RT and the TKI group, with a median OS of 35.4 (95% CI, 30.3-40.6 months) months
and 35.8 months (95% CI, 27.1-44.5 months), respectively (P=0.695). After the Cox
proportional hazards analysis, only the use of osimertinib was a protective factor to
OS (HR 0.28, 95% CI 0.10 to 0.78, Table S2).
In order to analyze the reason why prolonged iPFS and sPFS failed to benefit the OS
in the RT group, we looked into the salvage radiotherapy after the first progression
and the length of time that patients stayed in initial TKI. For patients in the RT group,
9 out of 36 (25%) received salvage RT. Among 10 patients experienced intracranial
failure as first failure, 5 (50%) patients received intracranial salvage RT. There were 3
and 1 patients got extracranial and simultaneous salvage RT, respectively. For patients
in the TKI group, 16 out of 34 (47.1%) patients got salvage RT to failure sites. 12 out
of 14 (85.7%) patients who experienced intracranial failure as the first failure received
intracranial salvage RT. Also, 1 patient received simultaneous RT salvage, and 3 got
extracranial salvage RT. Until the last follow-up, 31 (58.5%) patients in the upfront
RT group changed to SST and 83.9% (26/31) of them due to extracranial or both
progressions. The corresponding number in the TKI group was 26 (65.0%) and 84.6%
(22/26). The median time from BM diagnosis to SST did not differ significantly
between upfront RT group (median time, 23.6 months, 95% CI 22.0-25.3 months) and
TKI group (median time, 18.9 months, 95% CI 8.4-29.3 months) (P=0.862, Figure
3B).
Discussion
Compared to the TKI group, we found that the upfront RT significantly lowered the
probability of intracranial progression with SHR 0.38 (P=0.006). However, the
prolonged iPFS did not translate to the benefit of OS and time to SST. Our data
showed that the salvage RT for the oligo-progression of EGFR-TKI significantly
prolonged the time patients stayed in initial TKI. Even though the patients in the TKI
group had poor iPFS, the salvage RT to the intracranial failure sites helped them get to
the similar time to SST and OS compared to the RT group. Some retrospective studies
showed the same salvage RT effectiveness. Yu et al. reported that patients with
acquired resistance to TKI therapy achieved the PFS with 10 months and time to SST
with 22 months after receiving local treatment to their oligo-progression sites[14]. Qiu
et al. demonstrated that forty-six patients with oligo-progressive stage III-IV NSCLC
after TKI benefited from the local therapy and continued TKI with another seven
months[15]. A retrospective matched-cohort study comparing patients with oligo-
progressive stage IV NSCLC showed better PFS (7.0 versus 4.1 months) and OS
(28.2 versus 14.7 months) in patients receiving radiotherapy compared to patients
changing to chemotherapy[16]. Hence, prospective clinical trials examining the
efficacy of upfront RT and salvage RT on NSCLC with EGFR mutation and BM are
needed.
A few other studies also focused on the role of RT combined with TKI as upfront
therapy. A retrospective study including 351 patients compared the role of SRS+TKI
(n=100), WBRT+TKI (n=120) and TKI alone (n=131) in the effectiveness of iPFS
and OS[17]. It is not surprising that the patients in the SRS group had the most
extended OS due to their best baseline characteristics. However, their study
demonstrated that patients treated with WBRT had a trend for a lower cumulative
incidence of intracranial progression (P=0.062) and significantly better OS (P=0.039).
As to patients’ characteristics, only 22% of patients in WBRT groups had extracranial
metastases at the time of brain metastases. Compared to our data that 55% of patients
in the RT group had extracranial metastases, the lower extracranial tumor burden in
this study might help the benefit from iPFS transformed to OS. What’s more, 76% of
the 351 patients in this study received second-line systemic therapy right after disease
progression in the last follow-up. There was no chance for salvage RT to prolong the
time on initial TKI, which might be another reason that the benefit of iPFS can be
transformed to OS. Jiang et al. demonstrated adding upfront WBRT to TKI compared
to TKI alone didn’t prolong the iPFS or OS in a retrospective study[18]. In their study,
65.9% of patients had more than 10 brain metastases and 60.0% of patients have
extracranial metastases at the baseline. Compared to the previous study, the much
more massive intracranial and extracranial tumor burden probably hid the benefit of
iPFS from RT. A meta-analysis, which also included the above two studies,
demonstrated the upfront RT helped to prolong the iPFS and OS in the same
scenario[19]. It should be acknowledged that all the studies included were
retrospective studies and few of them considered the role of salvage RT.
In our study, we found that the use of second-line osimertinib was the only protective
factor to OS (HR 0.28, 95%CI 0.10 to 0.78). It is known that osimertinib is the
standard regimen in patients whose disease had progressed during first-line EGFR-
TKI therapy with T790M-positive advanced NSCLC, including those with CNS
metastases[20]. Osimertinib demonstrated greater penetration of the mouse blood-
brain barrier than gefitinib or afatinib[21]. In the FLAURA trial, osimertinib showed
benefit on PFS in patients with central nervous system metastases with median PFS
15.2 months (95% CI 12.1-21.4 months) over standard EGFR-TKIs with median PFS
9.6 months (95% CI 7.0-12.4 months) (P <0.001)[22]. In the era that osimertinib used
as the first line TKI, the role of upfront RT needs more clinical evidence to illustrate.
Although our study shed some lights on the role of upfront RT and salvage local
therapy in treating EGFR mutant NSCLC with BM, several limitations should be
taken into account. First, this is a retrospective study that has inherent biases despite
our effort to narrow down our inclusion criteria and small cohort size. Second, we
failed to perform the propensity score-matched analysis to balance the baseline of the
two treatment groups due to the small number of patients. Last but not least, we did
not account for the potential toxicities associated with local therapies and their impact
on quality of life, such as functional independence and cognition.
Conclusion
In conclusion, upfront RT with TKI prolonged the iPFS and sPFS of the patients when
compared to TKI alone. The salvage RT helped the TKI alone patients had a similar
time on initial first-line TKI despite worse iPFS. Therefore, TKI alone will be
recommended if close surveillance and timely salvage local therapy can be achieved.
The best timing of intracranial radiotherapy on EGFR-mutant NSCLC with brain
metastases patients remains to be verified by large-sample and risk-stratified
prospective clinical trials.
Funding: This work was supported by CAMS Initiative for Innovative Medicine
(grant number 2017-I2M-1-005), the National Natural Science Foundation of China
(grant number 81572971) and the Non-profit Central Research Institue Fund of
Chinese Academy of Medical Sciences (grant number 2018PT32011).
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Table 1. Patient CharacteristicsRT (n=53, %) TKI (n=40, %) P
Age at BM (years) >60 20 (38) 18 (45) 0.331 50-60 15 (28) 14(35) <50 18 (34) 8 (20)Gender Male 25 (47) 19 (48) 0.975 Female 28 (53) 21 (52)KPS 70-80 43 (81) 28 (70) 0.211 90-100 10 (19) 12 (30)Smoking history No 35 (66) 24 (60) 0.549 Yes 18 (34) 16 (40)Number of BMs 1-3 24 (45) 22 (55) 0.645 4-10 23 (43) 14 (35) >10 6 (12) 4 (10)Extracranial metastases at the time of BM Yes 30 (55) 28 (70) 0.187 No 23 (45) 12 (30)Stage at diagnose I-III 17 (32) 7 (18) 0.112 IV 36 (68) 33 (82)Largest size of BM ≤10 mm 13 (25) 17 (43) 0.066 >10 mm 40 (75) 23 (57)Disease-specific GPA 0-1.5 24 (45) 21 (53) 0.491 2.0-4.0 29 (55) 19 (47)Symptom from BM No 33 (62) 32 (80) 0.065 Yes 20 (38) 8 (20)EGFR mutation Exon 19 deletion 28 (53) 21 (53) 0.975 Exon 21 L858R and others 25 (47) 19 (47)EGFR-TKI Gefitinib 34 (64) 21 (53) 0.288 Erlotinib 12 (23) 8 (20) Afatinib 0 (0) 1 (2) Icotinib 7 (13) 10 (25)
Use Osimertinib as salvage treatment No 44 (83) 32 (80) 0.709 Yes 9 (17) 8 (20)Abbreviations: KPS, Karnofsky Performance Score; BM, brain metastasis; GPA, graded prognostic assessment; RT, radiation therapy; TKI, tyrosine kinase inhibitor; EGFR, epidermal growth factor receptor; TKI, tyrosine kinase inhibitor.
Table 2. First site of progression by treatment type.
Treatment, N (%) First site of progression RT (n=53) TKI (n=40) P valueIntracranial failure 10 (18) 14 (35) 0.091Extracranial failure 22 (42) 14 (35)Simutaneous failure 4 (8) 6 (15)No failure 17 (32) 6 (15)
Abbreviations: RT, radiation therapy; TKI, tyrosine kinase inhibitor
Figure legends:
Figure 1. Cumulative incidence of intracranial progression using competing risks
regression analysis in patients treated with upfront RT and epidermal growth factor
receptor-TKI.
Figure 2. The sPFS in the RT group (median time, 15.6 months) was longer than in
the TKI alone group (median time, 8.9 months) (P= 0.009). Abbreviation: sPFS,
systemic progression-free survival; RT, radiation therapy; TKI, tyrosine kinase
inhibitors.
Figure 3. OS did not differ significantly between the RT and TKI group (35.4 vs 35.8
months, P=0.695)(A). The median time from brain metastases diagnosis to SST did
not differ significantly between upfront RT group and TKI group (23.6 vs 18.9
months, P=0.862)(B). Abbreviation: OS, overall survival; RT, radiation therapy; TKI,
tyrosine kinase inhibitors; SST, second-line systematic therapy.
Figure 1.
Figure 2.
Figure 3A.
Figure 3B.